
Scott L. Pomeroy, MD, PhD
Date: October 17, 2008
Time: Noon to 1:00
Title: "Developmental Derangements that Promote the Growth of Embryonal Brain Tumors"
Speaker: Scott L. Pomeroy, MD, PhD
Children's Hospital Boston
About Harry A. Waisman:
Harry Waisman received all four of his degrees from Wisconsin: a B.S. in 1935,
M.S. and Ph.D. in biochemistry in 1937 and 1939; and M.D. in 1947. He served
his internship and residency in pediatrics at the University of Illinois. He
completed post-doctoral training both at Wisconsin and Illinois and was on the
staff at Illinois from 1950-1952.
He joined the University of Wisconsin faculty in 1952 as
associate professor of pediatrics and was promoted to full professor in 1958.
He became director of the Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. Memorial Laboratories for
mental retardation research in 1963. The laboratories grew from an initial grant
from the family of President John F. Kennedy, which Waisman was largely
instrumental in obtaining.
In association with Harry Harlow and the UW Primate
Laboratory, Waisman conducted ground-breaking research on Phenylketonuria (PKU).
Waisman?s research centered chiefly on this hereditary disease, in which an
inborn metabolic error results in an accumulation of the amino acid
phenylalanine and its derivatives, causing mental retardation. Detected early
enough by a simple test, the defect can be treated effectively by a
low-phenylalanine diet. Waisman was an outspoken proponent during legislative
battles in the mid 1960s for mandatory testing of infants for PKU.
Prior to his mental retardation work, Waisman was
involved in studies related to cancer and leukemia in children. He co-authored
a book with the late UW president and fellow biochemist Conrad A. Elvehjem.
He was a member of numerous professional and honorary
societies and won many important national honors for his pediatrics work. He
was one of the driving forces in the establishment of a multidisciplinary center
at the University of Wisconsin-Madison dedicated to the study of human
development and mental retardation. He died unexpectedly during surgery in 1971.
Where: John D Wiley Conference Center
Room T216, Second Floor, North Tower
For Further Information: Contact Teresa Palumbo at 263-5837 or
palumbo@waisman.wisc.edu
This Seminar Series is partially funded by the
John D Wiley Fund, the Friends of the Waisman Center and NIH grant P30 HD003352.